During World War I, Wetmore served on the Committee on Women's Defense Work, and was a member of the National Patriotic Relief Committee, and worked with Herbert Hoover, then the National Food Administrator. She was also a member of the American section of Committee for Relief of Belgian Prisoners in Germany. Though she never supported the suffrage movement, she hoped that war work with empower women to peacetime reforms: "If some of the war enthusiasm can be rekindled and women made to understand and see and then in mass demand for their children what the Government, in honor bound, is obligated to give them, there would be no difficult in solving the school problem," she proclaimed in a 1920 speech. "The coming generation would be finer and women, consequently, finer citizens." During World War II, she was vice president of the American Friends of France.
Wetmore and her older sister Edith K. Wetmore were active in historical preservation in Newport, Rhode Island. They took particular interest in the Seamen's Church Institute and the Old State House. The Wetmore sisters donated many of the valuable objects they inherited to museums, including French earthenware to the Cooper Hewitt Museum, a "ladies' phaeton" to the carriage gallery of the New-York Historical Society, and a collection of silver toys and family portraits to the Yale University Art Gallery. The Wetmores hosted cultural events at Chateau-sur-Mer, including a garden party honoring Navy admiral Joseph Mason Reeves in 1934,and a chamber music concert in 1938, with Leonard Bernstein, then a Harvard undergraduate, performing as piano soloist.
Maude A. K. Wetmore died on November 3, 1951 at aged 78, from a heart attack, at her Chateau-sur-Mer. In her will, Maude bequeathed the Wetmore mansion to her sister's use and then to the New England Society for the Preservation of Antiquities. The Preservation Society of Newport County now operates Chateau-sur-Mer as a museum.
During World War I, Wetmore served on the Committee on Women's Defense Work, and was a member of the National Patriotic Relief Committee, and worked with Herbert Hoover, then the National Food Administrator. She was also a member of the American section of Committee for Relief of Belgian Prisoners in Germany. Though she never supported the suffrage movement, she hoped that war work with empower women to peacetime reforms: "If some of the war enthusiasm can be rekindled and women made to understand and see and then in mass demand for their children what the Government, in honor bound, is obligated to give them, there would be no difficult in solving the school problem," she proclaimed in a 1920 speech. "The coming generation would be finer and women, consequently, finer citizens." During World War II, she was vice president of the American Friends of France.
Wetmore and her older sister Edith K. Wetmore were active in historical preservation in Newport, Rhode Island. They took particular interest in the Seamen's Church Institute and the Old State House. The Wetmore sisters donated many of the valuable objects they inherited to museums, including French earthenware to the Cooper Hewitt Museum, a "ladies' phaeton" to the carriage gallery of the New-York Historical Society, and a collection of silver toys and family portraits to the Yale University Art Gallery. The Wetmores hosted cultural events at Chateau-sur-Mer, including a garden party honoring Navy admiral Joseph Mason Reeves in 1934,and a chamber music concert in 1938, with Leonard Bernstein, then a Harvard undergraduate, performing as piano soloist.
Maude A. K. Wetmore died on November 3, 1951 at aged 78, from a heart attack, at her Chateau-sur-Mer. In her will, Maude bequeathed the Wetmore mansion to her sister's use and then to the New England Society for the Preservation of Antiquities. The Preservation Society of Newport County now operates Chateau-sur-Mer as a museum.
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